While Urban Ghosts covers a range of subjects, most of our content to date has focussed on historically intriguing places long since abandoned. So today, in the wake of our 500,000th unique visit, it’s time to take a step back and ask a couple of questions: why are we so fascinated by forgotten places? and why do mainstream individuals indulge in this strange under-the-radar hobby known as urban exploration? From a visual perspective, urbex photographer Thomas Slatin has some answers.

Writing on CurrentPhotographer.com, Thomas explains that “taking photos of abandoned places can teach you an enormous number of specialized skills that are generally not taught in a traditional classroom setting.” He highlights four main areas – framing, attention to detail, mental awareness and preservation – which can help improve your technique with subject matter not limited to urban decay.

Framing – This has nothing to do with what is clamped around a photo before it goes on the wall, and everything to do with how a composition is established. Thomas stresses the importance of thinking ahead before even snapping a photo, and considering what the image will look like once printed.

Attention to detail – This means the little things, often unnoticed, that can make a photograph come to life. To illustrate this point, Thomas uses a doll (similar to the one above found in the abandoned Lee Plaza building in Detroit), which has since become one of his most sought-after images.

Mental awareness – An awareness of your surroundings is crucial in capturing that perfect shot, but is also important due to the hazards posed by abandoned buildings (see below). Thomas attributes his heightened awareness to his previous experience as an emergency medical technician and firefighter.

Preservation – Many of those individuals loosely defined as urban explorers are preservationists, or at least approach the hobby with some interest in the history of the places they seek to explore. Photographing abandoned buildings, while potentially generating some mysterious and inspiring imagery, is also an important way of chronicling our past in pictures.

These areas outline how abandoned places can help improve photographic technique with a range of other subjects, and highlight why many urban explorers are also photographers. (Keep in mind that abandoned structures are extremely hazardous places, and should never be entered without permission. Thomas covers safety and legality issues in this article.)

But what about other explorers who aren’t historians or photographers? The fact is that humans are curious creatures and have long been drawn to the strange, the mysterious or the seemingly off-limits. Just as hardened skeptics might still secretly find talk of ghosts or UFOs compelling, abandoned places appeal to our sense of intrigue, and often draw us in for reasons we don’t always comprehend. (For a tutorial on photographing urban decay, click here.)

Around the web

Dorisn21

Curiosity inducing, definitely. Do you know the names of these locations and maybe a bit about them? Mainly I’m interested in the concert hall (last photo).

http://www.urbanghostsmedia.com Tom

Hi Dorisn21, thanks a lot for your comment! I must confess in this instance I don’t know the history of many of these buildings, as they’re more to illustrate the photography. But they do include an abandoned cinema, abandoned sanatorium, an abandoned factory in Lurgan. The church (second top pic) is in the village of Oppède-le-Vieux, while the apartment building with the doll and grand piano is Lee Plaza in Detroit (more info here: http://buildingsofdetroit.com/places/lee). I’m not sure where the abandoned theatre is (bottom image) but it’s definitely a pretty cool place!

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003053726841 Alana Tortuga

What the hell does someone having a “mainstream job” and “degree” have to do with ANYTHING, and in this case, whether those people like looking around abandoned buildings or not?

There is too much meaning and significance placed on status in our society and it’s bullshit.

http://www.urbanghostsmedia.com Tom

Sorry if we offended you Alana. We were merely talking about the strange hobby of exploring abandoned buildings and that it often appeals to a surprising audience – not strictly the fact that they have day jobs and degrees (as we wouldn’t try and suggest that only those that don’t look around abandoned buildings) but that they do it at all. That said, there are times we could word things better.